Union Trust Co. of Md. T. State

Decision Date24 June 1911
Citation81 A. 873,116 Md. 368
PartiesUNION TRUST CO. OF MARYLAND T. STATE.
CourtMaryland Court of Appeals

Appeal from Superior Court of Baltimore City; James P. Gorter, Judge.

Action by the State of Maryland against the Union Trust Company of Maryland. From a judgment for plaintiff, defendant appeals. Affirmed.

Argued before BOYD, C. J., and BRISCOE, PATTISON, URNER, and STOCKBRIDGE, JJ.

J. Wallace Bryan and Charles E. Fink, for appellant. James M. Munroe, for the State.

STOCKBRIDGE, J. This is a suit brought in the name of the state of Maryland, in accordance with the provisions of section 152 of article 81 of the Code of Public General Laws of 1904, against the Union Trust Company of Maryland to recover the amount of the state tax on 20,000 shares of the capital stock of that corporation for the year 1907.

The material facts are as follows: On January 11, 1907, the Union Trust Company of Maryland, by Richard D. Sellman, its treasurer, filed with the state tax commissioner the report required to be made by section 150 of article 81, and on January 22d of the same year the tax commissioner placed the valuation upon the stock of $49.50 per share, gross, or with the deduction claimed by the company and allowed by the tax commissioner, of $17.66 per share net, as the valuation of the stock of the company for the purposes of taxation. On some date between January 11th and 22d entries were made in a book in the state tax commissioner's office, known as the "book of division of stock," and in this was set out the number of shares liable to taxation in Baltimore City and in each of the counties. And on or about the same date the appeal tax court of Baltimore City and the county commissioners in the several counties were notified of the valuation placed upon the shares of the stock of this corporation. In a letter from the tax commissioner to one of the counsel of the company appears the statement that the levy of the tax was made by him (the state tax commissioner) and certified to the Comptroller on the 17th of May, 1907, and by the certificate of the state tax commissioner it appears that on the 17th of May, 1907, the tax commissioner certified to the Comptroller the assessment of this stock. Prom the valuation of the state tax commissioner an appeal was taken under the provisions of section 162 of article 81, and the valuation of the state tax commissioner confirmed. On February 25, 1907, the Union Trust Company reduced its outstanding stock from 20,000 to 10,000 shares, and paid off, liquidated, and retired 10,000 shares, at a valuation of $60 per share, and on the 16th of April, 1907, notified the state tax commissioner of such reduction in its capital stock.

The record in this case shows several demurrers, and at the trial the plaintiff offered 6, and the defendant 22, prayers, of which the court granted the plaintiff's first, second, fifth, and sixth, and refused all of the other prayers. The questions raised by the demurrers were all substantially raised under one or another of the prayers.

In the view which the court takes of this case, it is unnecessary to consider in detail the several rulings on the demurrers and upon the prayers, as they all involve one or another of four propositions of law, viz.: (1) That the taxes upon this stock were levied by the state tax commissioner, and not by the Comptroller of the State, and the levy was therefore void; (2) that the assessment is void because it was an assessment made against the company and not against the owners of the stock; (3) because it was not certified by the state tax commissioner to the Comptroller until May 17, 1907, two days after the date named in the statute; and (4) because at most the state can recover taxes upon only 10,000 of the 20,000 shares of stock which were issued by the company.

It is proper to say in limine that laws for the assessment and collection of general taxes are construed with the utmost liberality (Turpin v. Lemmon, 187 U. S. 58, 23 Sup. Ct. 20, 47 L. Ed. 70); that the construction is not to be a critical one with a view to defeat the enactment, but a liberal interpretation so as to uphold it, if possible (McSherry, C. J., in Monticello Co. v. Baltimore City, 90 Md. 416, 45 Atl. 210; Am. Coal Co. v. Co. Com'rs, 59 Md. 185).

And no authority is needed for the proposition that the acts of a public officer in the discharge of his duties are entitled to the presumption of having been correctly performed.

1. By the provisions of section 150 of article 81 it is made the duty of the state tax commissioner to make the levy upon shares of stock of corporations as of the 1st day of January preceding, and the contention of the trust company in the present case is that that was what was done with regard to this stock, although by chapter 404 of the Acts of 1906, the duty of levying the state taxes was imposed upon the Comptroller.

In passing it is to be observed that the act of 1906 was not in terms an amendment of section 150, but of section 22 of article 81, and therefore it may be claimed that there were two sections of the Code, each of which gave the authority to levy the tax but gave it to different officials. To this objection the answer is clear and complete. In the first place some confusion arises out of the use of the word "levy." "The word levy has different meanings according to the object to which it is applied. As applied to taxes it sometimes means to raise and exact by authority of government or to determine by vote the amount of tax to be raised. It is in this sense that towns and cities levy taxes; in other cases it is used with reference to the mere ministerial or executive act of entering them on the tax book and collecting them." 5 Words & Phrases, p. 4101, citing State v. Lakeside Land Co., 71 Minn. 283, 73 N. W. 970. See, also, So. R. W. v. Kay, 62 S. C. 28, 39 S. E. 785.

The act of 1906 in terms fixed the amount per hundred dollars to be imposed by way of tax. This of itself constituted a legislative levy of the tax, but that levy needed to complete it the entry upon the book of the State Comptroller. The act of 1906 vested no power in the Comptroller to determine the amount or rate of the tax, neither did it give him any function to perform in the way of valuing the stock, that in assessing or determining the value of it for purposes of taxation. The function of the Comptroller under the act of 1906 was therefore a purely ministerial act, and was fully performed when he entered upon his books the number of shares of stock liable to taxation, the corporation the stock of which was taxed, the rate of taxation, and extended the amount of the tax. This apparently was also done by the state tax commissioner under the authority of section 150, but it was none the less done by the State Comptroller when he made his entries, and the fact that similar action was taken by two separate officials, identical in its nature, and each acting under express provisions of law, though one or the other of them may have been superfluous, cannot be regarded as invalidating the tax. Clark Dist. Co. v. Cumberland, 95 Md. 476, 52 Atl. 661.

Nor can the fact, as in this case, that the Legislature has made the levy itself be a ground of objection. Such a power is distinctly within the province of the Legislature, and the fact that it may be delegated, either in whole or in part, does not destroy the validity of the act, but such delegation may be, and sometimes is, made because the power can in such manner be more conveniently exercised. State v. Mayhew, 2 Gill 490.

2. The second ground of objection is the assumption that the tax sought to be collected in this suit is a tax levied upon the company, and not one where the stock was valued and assessed to the owners thereof in the county or city in which the owners respectively resided. Upon this branch of the case it is to be noted, first, that there is no requirement exacted by section 150 of article 81 that the official of the corporation shall return to the state tax commissioner a list of the stockholders therein, only of the number of shares of capital stock. The requirement of the list of stockholders appears in section 156, and such list is to be made in an entirely separate return, required from the officers of a corporation, to the appeal tax court of Baltimore City, the county commissioners of a county, or the city clerk of an incorporated town or...

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  • Clark v. City of Burlington
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    ...... board of civil authority of that city were "strictly in accordance with the statutes of the state of Vermont, and we therefore find and report that the appeal should not be sustained, [and] that ...Union Trust Co. v. State, 116 Md. 368, 81 A. 873, 874; Turpin v. Lemmon, 187 U. S. 51, 58, 23 S. Ct. 20, ......
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